My first visits to a newsroom came back in the 1970s when I would deliver lunch to my dad. He was the editor of The Times-Herald in Norristown, Pennsylvania, and I can still recall many of the sights and sounds.
Cigarette and cigar smoke filled the room. Stories from the Associated Press and United Press International came over automated typewriter-like machines that rang an occasional bell announcing a major story.
The language in the room was, shall we say, more colorful than modern-day workplaces might allow.
It was through these sights, sounds and smells that I would make my way to the back of the room to deliver his sandwich.
I recall on one of those visits the first time I saw a computer monitor on his desk just before he died in 1980. It wasn’t hooked up to anything at that point, and he would allow me to play with it. The machine, he said, was going to change his business forever.
Obviously, he was right. What he couldn’t have known at that time was the internet wasn’t too far behind. And the dramatic shift of news consumption would soon follow.
I’ve been around newspapers all my life – from those early visits to my father through the past 35 years in the business myself.
I share this as I remind readers that it is no easy decision to reduce the number of printed editions. But starting this week, The News Journal will cease printing a Saturday newspaper, and instead provide a full digital replica of the newspaper online that day.
We do this in response to the continued rapid shifts toward digital news consumption.
The new model means subscribers can get newspapers delivered to their homes six days a week, with a digital edition available every day. That, and major enhancements to the digital, or e-edition, were first announced in January.
At the same time, The News Journal is making updates to its puzzle offerings. You’ll see new puzzles such as LexiGo, Jumble, Boggle Brainbusters and more. We will no longer carry TV grids, but we will feature a What To Watch on TV column.
Your News Journal subscription also comes with e-edition access to daily late pages of news and sports, free USA Today daily and special sections and the ability to read a rolling 30 days of any of the digital replicas from the hundreds of USA Today Network news sites around the country.
FOR SUBSCRIBERS:Learn how to use The News Journal’s e-Edition
All print subscribers also have an online account included with their subscription, giving access to premium subscriber-only journalism — accessible via delawareonline.com — and unlimited content.
If you’re a print subscriber who hasn’t activated your account, you can do so at delawareonline.com/activate.
We thank you for your continued support of local journalism in Delaware.
For assistance with digital access to the e-edition or DelawareOnline.com, or with questions about subscriptions, billing or delivery, please call 800-801-3322 or email wilmingtonnewsjournal@gannett.com. You can also log in to DelawareOnline.com to manage your account, report a delivery concern and adjust your preferences. You can also visit aboutyoursubscription.delawareonline.com for additional information.